Saturday, May 30, 2015

Down on the bayou

A huge red metal crawfish adorns the kitchen counter of Debbie and Rick's open kitchen.  A promise of the hospitality to come!

Over the Easter weekend, I took a road trip to South Louisiana.  It is one of my favorite places to go because I get to spend time with my friends, Debbie and Richard, who I have known since BK (Before Kids).  That, folks, is a very long time!  The mid-70's as a matter of fact. They are the epitome of welcoming, generous Southern folks. I pull into their driveway in Pontchatoula, Louisiana, and I think:  Laissez les bons temps rouler!  And .... they do!

This time I brought with me two gallon bags of frozen figs from last year's harvest with the idea that Debbie and I would make fig preserves. It was also time for strawberries from Ponchatoula's area farms to be for sale on the roadsides and street corners.  So, Friday and Saturday, she and I spent our time together "jamming", while Richard ran to the store for more sugar, more pectin, more jars, and once for a new blender so that we could chop the strawberries more efficiently.  He also kept the Diet Cokes (Debbie) and beer (me) coming.  He had a vested interest in all of our activity.

We got 7 pints and one quart out of the 2 gallons of figs I brought.

You see, Rick is a Certified Fig Fanatic.  He loves them.  I mean, REALLY loves them, and he was keeping track of where each filled jar was at all times. Upon opening and tasting from the first jar, Richard declared that our fig jam tasted just like his grandmother's and that he claimed every jar as his.  " They can have strawberry!" were his exact words, as I recall.  Richard is one reason I am trying my darnedest to root some fig twigs.

We bought a flat and a half of freshly picked strawberries, still warm from the fields!
They smelled like strawberry cotton candy, full of sunshine and natural sweetness!
We made 5 batches of strawberry jam, and they have been declared "scrumptious" by those who have tasted them.  To one batch we added cracked black pepper, and another, vanilla extract per some recipes we came across.  Not bad, but  not especially interesting either!
Friday night it was time for boiled crawfish and shrimp, potatoes, corn and "real" French bread ... the kind they only make in South Louisiana..... wonderfully soft in just the right places and perfectly crusty everywhere else!

I had another good reason to visit the bayou country that weekend. In mid February, Debbie had asked me if I would be able to knit an afghan for her that would go in a very special friend's living room in a very special home in the Garden District of New Orleans.  I would have a deadline, that being May 15.  Could I do it?!  I said yes.  

She told me that it needed to be very particular colors:  a very grayed blue (no lavender, no green), ivory, buttery yellow, and a peach that was not too pinkish, but was more orange and brownish.  She wanted a variety of yarns for textures and no squares (too "quilt-y"), but stripes would be okay.  I was excited!  No problem!

Well, yep, problem!  Hard to find yarns in these colors.  Hard to make these colors work in one piece.  Hard to find a variety of textures in yarns in these colors.  Before long, I began to hyperventilate and lose sleep.  Fortunately, I had already planned that road trip to Pontchatoula because I was going to need her input on this.  I couldn't do it alone!

In the meantime, I gathered up yarns I thought would work from my own stash, Hobby Lobby and from some of my online sources.  There was also a budget, mind you!  I knitted at night after work, and most of the days on the weekends.  I planned and knitted, and "frogged" what I had knitted and started over again.  I did not like what was coming off my needles!  Panic!  Hyperventilation!  Oh, NO!

The blues and peaches were just not right.  I needed to dye some yarns to get what I needed in those specific shades.  I thought we should add some greens after looking at a photo of the room itself.  I gathered up several shades of Rit dyes,both powdered and liquid, that I could mix in my dye pot and, hopefully, come up with what I needed.  I absolutely love to dye, and prefer to use Kool-Aid, Rit and sources from Nature itself, so this was exciting.

I gathered my dyeing pot, my dyes, my salt and my vinegar, and skeined off yarns for dying.
And I got to work in my kitchen!
A break in the rain that weekend allowed me the pleasure of hanging my new yarns out to dry on the clothesline.  A colorful sight!

And now, back to Easter weekend in Pontchatoula.  After the wonderful jars of jams were made, I brought out my yarns and swatches for Debbie to look over and tell me what she thought.  We culled some colors and yarns immediately.  Debbie said "no!" to any green and praised the shades of peach I had produced.  As expected, the blues were the hardest to decide on as to which would work and which would not.  She loved the textures, both in the knitting and in the yarns themselves, that I had produced.   And the stripes she wanted, were what I would call "bands" of color.  In the end, we had a plan and there was Excitement on both our parts.  For me, there was also Relief!

This is what Debbie and I ended up with as our Afghan Plan.  This shows 4 of the 5 color bands
that we decided on.  The fifth was a beautiful blue chosen from a small sample I brought with me.

Back home, I began ripping out squares and re-knitting them into the chosen bands, but the blue chosen from the small sample did not coordinate well once it was knitted into a larger amount of color.  Dang!  It happened to be my favorite of all the yarns, but I just could not make it work!  My friend, Judy, and I took a road trip to Tyler on the following Saturday to check out the brand new JoAnn's Fabric store, and there I found a blue yarn to use for that final band.  It was a much thicker yarn, but I felt it would work.  The color was just perfect.  I breathed a sigh of relief!

As the deadline quickly approached, I finished the five bands of color, joined them with a mattress stitch, and knit several rows of edging on all four sides, with smaller size needles, to give it stability.  The various textures and thicknesses of the yarns needed to be controlled, you see.

I steam blocked it, pinned in place, on my bed.  This helped it maintain its shape.  Very important,
as the different yarns had different weights, as well as a mind of their own!

Under the ceiling fan in my bedroom, the afghan dried quickly, and while it dried, I gathered and cut the ribbons and yarns I  planned on using for the long fringes that Debbie wanted.  At this point, I was still not yet confident in the design of  this piece.  Something was missing.

As you can see from my photos, these colors can look so differently in
different lighting.
The fringes are 8" long and made of narrow ribbons and textured yarns.

Once the fringes were on, it looked beautiful and all the colors and textures came together, and I sighed a HUGE sigh of Relief.  And smiled!

I got the afghan in the mail to Pontchatoula in plenty of time for the events at the New Orleans home, and Debbie said she loved it and was pleased with how soft it was.  I want to see a photo of it in the room on the back of that sofa before I can know for sure!

With this project I learned a few things. One is that "simple is usually better", especially with things that are complicated.  Also, when you are doing a project for someone, find out as soon as you can, EXACTLY what they have in mind .....  BEFORE you start working on it!  It turns out, Debbie said "knit" when she really meant "weave"!  When she said "stripes," I thought no more than an inch wide, possibly thinner.  She was thinking wider, more like what I would call "bands."  Ask them to show you what they mean, because once they do and you are both on the same sheet of music, you can have your Ah-Ha moment without pushing the Panic Button  .....  hopefully!  


Now, for those of you who didn't see my post on Facebook of the photo of my first little leopard frog:

Leopard froglet.  Is it not just the cutest thing you have seen in awhile?!
Here you can clearly see his "leopard spots".

I named it "Prince," but I did not kiss it.  I thought about it, but I didn't.  Within the week, Prince had left the tadpole habitat and gone off on his Life's Adventure.  I hope he is able to live a long and happy life, eating as many mosquitoes and flies as he can around here. It will be a good year for those mosquitoes what with all this rain!  Meanwhile, another tadpole is growing hind legs, and soon there will be another little froglet here on HeartSong Farm's back porch.

And crawfish has made another appearance in my life!  

Last night, Tammy and Chris brought me some boiled crawfish because they had too much! Now wasn't that nice of them to think of me?  I sure thought so!  There was enough to enjoy right out of the bucket, and some reserved for making etouffee later.  Almost as good as being back down on the bayou!

And Richard ......  it looks like we may have another bumper crop of figs this July and August!  YAY!

Figs developing on my fig tree, loving all the rainwater this spring.

It is still very very muddy here on the farm, but we have not been involved in any of the tragic flooding of this past week, and for that we are grateful.  Prayers to all those affected by those recent storms.  More evidence of Global Warming, I wonder?  Hmmm....


Today, we are enjoying a day of mostly sunshine here on HeartSong Farm!


4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh, those strawberries look delicious!!! Yum.. I'm curious about the taste of fig jam. As a child I was never brave enough to even taste a fig and thought they looked disgusting when my mom ate them off the bush! Fig Newtons aren't bad though. :) Thanks for sharing your adventures knitting, dyeing, traveling, and eating. I always look forward to your next post!
ERT

Anonymous said...

I loved every word of this blog, but there's something special about experiencing adventures such as fig jamming with friends. I have to say that you are very modest about your fiber skills. From someone who is still a beginner at this after a long time, the works of art you create take years of experience and lots of creativity. You have both in abundance!

Unknown said...

ERT,

Next time I see you (August?!) I just might have something figgy for you!

Anonymous said...

The afghan is amazing. Thank you so very much for all your hard work. We will treasure it for many years to come.